Guest guest Posted January 8, 2010 Report Share Posted January 8, 2010 "NLP Wessex" <nlpwessexJanuary 8, 2010 12:48:00 PM HSTGM and Nanotech - The New Witches Brew"NLP Wessex" <nlpwessex "Nanomaterials are attractive to the food industry because their very small size gives them different properties from larger molecules."London Times, 8 January 2010 The notion that science has the capacity to assess the long-term health impacts of these minute novel particles in food is crass in the extreme. The techno fanatics believe, for example, that such feeble 'benefits' as making your food change colour when it approaches its use-by expiry justify all this. By the time this is combined with GM ingredients coming generations can look forward to a veritable 'slow drip' witches brew on their plates. It seems we never learned the lesson of trans fats, another artificial food supposed to have been good for consumers, but which decades later science finally admitted had been responsible for killing millions. For more on the trans fats 'experience' see http://www.nlpwessex.org/docs/transfats.htm . www.nlpwessex.orgWill GM Crop Deliver Benefits To Farmers?www.nlpwessex.org/docs/gmagric.htm http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article6979809.eceFrom The TimesJanuary 8, 2010Secretive food firms risk public backlash, Lords warnMark Henderson, Science EditorThe secretive attitude of food companies towards nanotechnology research risks starting a consumer backlash against products that could improve health and reduce waste, a parliamentary inquiry has found.Nanomaterials that are 800 times finer than a human hair have the potential to deliver foods that are very low in fat and salt and packaging that changes colour when food is spoiled because of the strange properties of molecules at such a small scale. Their development, however, has also raised safety concerns because their effects on humans are poorly understood.These fears have inspired a culture of secrecy about nanotechnology in the food industry because it is worried about a repeat of the GM crop safety scare, according to a report from the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee. This lack of transparency could encourage exactly the sort of mistrust that companies hope to avoid.The committee also found significant gaps in scientific understanding of the toxicology of nanomaterials, which need to be addressed urgently with new research so that they can be regulated effectively.Nanomaterials are attractive to the food industry because their very small size gives them different properties from larger molecules. The attractive tastes of salt and fat could be achieved with lower quantities if nanoparticles are used, making healthier mayonnaise or ice cream. Nanomaterials that change colour on contact with the by-products of decomposing food could be used in smart packaging.While nanotechnology is not used in food in Britain, at least 84 food products and packagings are available worldwide. The Lords committee heard that the global market for food nanotechnology will increase from $410 million (£260 million) in 2006 to $5.8 billion by 2012.However, the committee said that food companies had avoided discussing the products that they were developing.“The food industry was very reluctant to put its head above the parapet and declare openly what kind of research was going on to develop nanotechnology,” said Lord Krebs, the former chairman of the Food Standards Agency, who chaired the inquiry. “Part of the reason is that it got its fingers burnt over GM technology, so it’s attempting to keep a very low profile.“Our view is that this is exactly the wrong approach. Our view is that secrecy is more likely to generate a backlash than being open, particularly as there are potentially consumer benefits.” =====In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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